Portsmouth Herald

Pro-gun group attacks NH mental health do-not-sell list bill

- Annmarie Timmins

Pro-gun rights groups have made a Second Amendment argument against a New Hampshire bill that would stop gun sales to individual­s whom a court had found dangerous enough to require commitment to a psychiatri­c hospital. One speaker warned a House committee at a public hearing last month against limiting the “God-given” right to own a gun.

The New Hampshire Firearms Coalition is reaching out to voters with another argument that mental health advocates – and the bill’s Republican sponsor – say is derogatory: It argues that it is “crazy” and “insane” to address public safety concerns by adding individual­s hospitaliz­ed in limited circumstan­ces to a do-not-sell list, as House Bill 1711 would.

The bill was prompted by the November shooting death of state hospital security officer Bradley Hass by former patient John Madore, who was then shot and killed by a state trooper. Madore had been committed to the state hospital at least once and had his guns confiscate­d in 2016.

The gun rights coalition instead argues that people hospitaliz­ed due to mental illness and dangerousn­ess should be detained in the hospital until they are well. Upon release, it says, they should not be kept from buying a gun.

“If these people are so violent that they need to be disarmed, why are they

released at all?” reads the flyer, which was sent to some House Republican­s and their constituen­ts. On the opposite side, it says: “Crazy is as crazy does.”

Rep. Terry Roy, a Deerfield Republican who co-sponsored HB 1711 with House Democratic Rep. David Meuse of Portsmouth, received the flyer, as did his constituen­ts.

“It was insulting,” said Roy. “It was demeaning to anyone who has a mental illness, which a large portion of our population will at some point.” An estimated 1 in 5 people experience­s a mental illness each year. Roy said that once he explained the bill to the couple of constituen­ts who called him, “they were happy.”

Susan Stearns, executive director of NAMI New Hampshire, responded similarly when she saw the flyer.

“It’s deliberate­ly trying to exploit the stereotype around people with mental illness being violent and needing to be kept away from society,” she said. “Ultimately that hurts a lot of Granite Staters and perpetuate­s that type of stereotype and stigma.”

Stearns and Roy said the flyer also misreprese­nts and overlooks the bill’s intent and measured balance between public safety and respecting the civil rights of people with mental illness. Not all mental health hospitaliz­ations would qualify someone to be added to the federal National Instant Criminal Background Check System. And there would be a clearly defined process for getting off the list.

Rep. J.R. Hoell, a Dunbarton Republican and secretary of the New Hampshire Firearms Coalition, interprets the bill and flyer differentl­y.

While the flyer does not say so, Hoell said he believes most people with mental illness are not violent and are more often the victims of violence. The use of “crazy” and “insane” was a “play on words,” he said, not intended to be insulting.

In Hoell’s mind, the bill would wrongly criminaliz­e mental illness by allowing the federal government to deny people who’ve never committed a crime their Second Amendment rights simply because they’ve been involuntar­ily hospitaliz­ed due to danger concerns.

However, federal law already prohibits anyone committed to a psychiatri­c institutio­n from buying or possessing a gun; New Hampshire, however, does not submit the relevant informatio­n to the database.

“This magic list does not solve the issue,” Hoell said, noting that upon release someone can get a gun beyond a gun store. “If you are a threat to others, you need residentia­l care. If you don’t need residentia­l care, you are not a threat to others. It’s A or B.”

Meuse remembers the day Roy, who has voted against every gun safety bill Meuse has supported, asked him to cosponsor HB 1711. The two have collaborat­ed on bail reform legislatio­n but never shared common ground on gun bills.

“I just remember being really surprised and then thinking to myself, ‘OK, don’t do anything to screw this up,’” Meuse said. “This is a really good thing.”

It will go to the full House later this month with an overwhelmi­ng 18-2 vote from the House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee that it be passed. In emotional testimony, the state hospital’s associate medical director called the shooting, during which the hospital security notificati­on system failed, “one of the worst moments of my life.”

While eight committee Republican­s joined Democrats in backing the bill, Roy knows he’ll face a fight on the House floor from Hoell, libertaria­ns, and some in his own party.

“I’m disappoint­ed in the shortsight­edness of the Second Amendment community,” Roy said. “What they don’t seem to get is that we are better off not having dangerous people buying firearms because every time there is a mass shooting and someone has a mental health issue, there are calls for more restrictio­ns on firearms.”

The bill would not apply to people who seek behavioral health treatment voluntaril­y or those who are the subject of an involuntar­y emergency admission petition.

The legislatio­n would apply only to people who are involuntar­ily admitted on a non-emergency basis, after a court hearing, during which they would have legal representa­tion. A judge would have to find them to have a mental condition that makes them dangerous to themselves or others.

The bill allows a court to confiscate an individual’s firearms and ammunition, but the person would have more control over how those guns are taken and where they are held.

The bill would provide a person the opportunit­y to petition a court for review of their “mental capacity,” a first step to being removed from the database. In some cases, they could do that within 15 days after their “absolute” discharge, meaning they are complying with treatment requiremen­ts. In other cases they must wait six months.

The Disability Rights Center-NH and NAMI NH required the bill include a process to be removed from the database. And the former persuaded the committee to limit the type of informatio­n entered into the database to protect individual­s’ privacy. Even then, the Disability Rights Center-NH said it won’t support the bill because of civil rights concerns but also won’t oppose it.

Those same civil rights concerns will lead Hoell to oppose it vehemently.

At best, he said, he’d support a state “patient list” of people deemed a danger to others due to a short-term mental illness. That would keep informatio­n out of federal hands, a priority, he said. He would support a legal path to regaining the right to buy and purchase a gun.

Meuse believes there are other New Hampshire gun owners, some of them lawmakers, who will split with Hoell and back the bill. And he thinks the shooting death of Haas by an individual who was committed to a psychiatri­c facility and had his guns confiscate­d will be persuasive.

“When you see the surveys, it’s not just Democrats and the left, (but) a lot of people who own firearms, who hunt, who basically think that we’ve just sort of reached the point where if we don’t do something, the consequenc­es of doing nothing are going to catch up to us even faster.”

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